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Chicago examiner monday february 17 1908 12 pages vol vi no 49 a m price one cent euvered hy carrier 30 centi per month anti-cannon forces join to compel primary feuds to be settled by state committee at springfield to-morrow Taft club demands vote deneen also expected to favor selection of national dele gates by people would sidetrack yates governor has chance to force most formidable opponent into speaker's camp m complete upheaval of re 7 publican policies and pacts in ** â€¢* Illinois is expected at the meeting of lhe republican state cen tral committee to be held in spring field to-morrow r m sullivan will present to the committee a resolution urging uiat it recommend a popular primary throughout the state for the hoice of delegates to the republican national convention the resolution will be backed by a committee of six selected by the wil liam h Taft club at a meeting in Chicago yesterday afternoon and con sisting of fred w upham a b mc coid frank t fowler j e mcmur ray george e roberts and e a ja-^.lscy reported favorable from springfield conies ihe word : hat governor deneen will not oppose ' and that he is passively favoring the selection of delegates at the prim ' aries which of course means that he is willing to forswear ' allegiance to the favorite son crusade apparently that porch climbers conven tion at litchfield last thursday has been seised upon by the governor as a fitting opportunity and an adequate excuse for bim to break with uncle joe cannon and bitch bis wagon to the rising star of the secretary of war in this he bas a two-fold object first he appreciates the growing strength of the ohio candidate who is also president roosevelt's candidate second he hopes o force his only formidable rival for the republican nomination for governor into odious company would send yates to cannon richard yates is a very effective cam paigner in the rural districts as a pyro technlcal orator he is greatly superior to governor deneen and he bas many friends in Illinois something bas to lie done witb mr yates before the sledding can be made xmooth for deneen's renominatlon the present governor thiuks he sees his ' â€¢ hance in forcing yates to line up with the cannon crowd and shoulder a portion of tbo responsibility for cannon's attitude toward the direct primary bill especially that portion of it which provided that there should be a popular vote on presidential candidates until this time governor deneen bas re frained from interfering witb uncle joe in bis fight for vest pocket delegations which be may deliver at the convention for bimself preferably and if not for himself for any other anti-roosevelt can didate who stands a show f winning the nomination governor feels his way me first but anything to help the reac tionaries is the cannon motto and so great has been the power of the federal machine in Illinois that governor deneen has heretofore been careful to avoid any thing that would indicate his disapproval of a carte blanche for cannon but for a long time back he bas been conducting a quiet canvass on his own ac count feeling the pulse and taking the po litical temperature of the people iu fifty seven counties he found the cannon senti ment very low and iu cook county he dis covered that the opposition to vest pocket delegates especially if they were to be put into uncle joe's waistcoat amounted almost to a popular protest in so far as his investigation has goue he estimates that ten men are for Taft where one favors caunon and he believes also that the odds against the favorite son in his own state are increasing rather than diminishing under such onslaughts as the porch-climbers convention in bis opinion he would be a btronger â€¢ andldale before the people as a tail to the Taft kite than as a trailer to the can non boom which echoes less and less sonorously as the date for the convention draws near â– credited to judge humphrey having arrived at t lis occlusion it only remained for him o hit upon a suit ble occasion for an open ruptnre witb the januon machine the meeting at litch 3 kinds of sunday weather all at one time in Chicago snow on south side clear and windy downtown sunny and pleasant in other parts professor henry cox who gets govern ment money for watching the weather will send in his report in sections to-day if he says that Chicago weather was thus and so or this way or as follows he can not cover the ground this is because chi cago is a large city and sometimes has vari ous kinds of weather all at once within its bounds while snow was falling yesterday after noon on the midway where the big cbi cago university is the air was clear and dry downtown and the wind was biting on the west side and north side it was sunny and pleasant and the wind was gentle the temperature fell to 20 degrees in the loop at 8 o'clock in the evening forecaster cox bad said the day would be cear and fine that was made good in some parts of the town whereas in woodlawn it was not clear and near the lake it was not fine hereafter be mf*y feel impelled to hand out such prognostications as this for hyde park snow and colder for goose island fair and warmer for cragin raiu the forecast to-day â€” for ali Chicago â€” ls just like yesterday jiggs donahue hurled from auto in 2 a m crash machine wrecked in collision with another on south side jiggs donahue first baseman for the white sox was severely hurt in an auto mobile collision this morning at thirty-fifth street and indiana avenue donahue wbo had recently purchased a big touring car was driving t lie machine north in indiana avenue at 2 a m when a car belonging ro tom cbantales the king of the greeks which was being driven west in thirty fifth street at a terrific pace struck donahue's car abeam donahue was thrown out of his auto and the left side of his face was badly burl both machines were wrecked . . . 2 signal sent maine to doom says sigsbee admiral telia how general lee gave word to come to havana washington feb 36 rear admiral sigsbee to-day in atr address told how the words two dollars sent lhe maine to havana and destruction ov.r government hesitated to send war ships to havana because it might precipi tate hostilities he said the maine was waiting at key west harbor for weeks i was in constant com munication with consul general lee in cuba our government did not wish to send one unless there was urgent need we arranged so that when general lee sent a message with the words two dol lars in it i should hasten to havana har bor during the latter part of january i read two dollars in a message and im mediately the maine sailed to her fate car overturns funeral carriage five injured mourners cut and bruised are re leased by spectators five mt-n hi ecupied a carriage in a funeral procession were injured yesterday when a twenty-sixth street car struck and overturned the vehicle nt cottage grove avenue the injured were a blllz sol north t.ilman avenue 15 k gross fi."in north irving avenue 3 if goldman 180 thome avenue m n bloom 4347 st law rence avenue and william will the driver 600 ashland avenue all were cut and bruised thougb not seriously the car struck the vehicle squarely completely overturning it the occupants were re leased from the carriage by the car crew and spectators the vehicle was badly damaged abolish u s senate urges prof zeublin rochester h t feb 16 1 hope the time will come said professor charles zeubliu of the university of Chicago in an address before the labor lyceum to-day when we will not try to reform the senate by electing our senators directly but abol ish it entirely the senate of the united states is the vermiform appendix of our government an operation for its removal is necessary to the political health of our country we still abide by our eighteenth century modes of thinking on political mat ters nine-tenths of our political doctrines were created in the eighteenth century morse is arrested at pier as wife greets him indicted financier declares he went to england hoping*,to sell property freed on 20,000 bail denies he traveled under as sumed name says he did not expect prosecution â– â– n a statement issued a few hows after his arrival from england c w morse the indicted financier made the following ex planation of his trip i thought i might be able to sell tn england property in which i had a larg-e interest and thus in crease my ability to meet the claims of my creditors and i greatly needed a fortnlg-bt's rest i did not sail on the campania under an assumed name nor make any effort to conceal my identity until i read the english papers i did not know my name had not been entered properly on the ship's register i assert my innocence of any criminal act new york feb 16.â€”when charles w morse the indicted financier returned to day from a two weeks trip abroad he was arrested at the pier on the charge of steal ing 200,000 a few hours after bis arrival he was re leased on 20,000 bail when morse returned from his annual va cation trip lo europe a few months ago be was the ice king and the owner of a chain of banks iu this city and he was greeted at the pier by a dozen smiling friends men of promineuce in the world of business to-day aside from the big formidable detectives and a band of reporters the only persons who deemed it worth while to uifiÃŸt trim were his son benjamin a stu dent at yale bis wife and his two law yers albert b boardmau and philip j britt although morse had been informed by wireless of the fact that nn indictment had been found against hiin it was evi dent to i'jose who saw him at the moment police lieutenant berry took him into custody on board the etruria at quaran tine be bad not expected to be arrested like ah ordinary malefactor shudder when arrested the financier shuddered as the lieutenant told him he was a prisoner the color left his face a look of fright shot into his eyes and for an instant he could utter no word a reassuring remark from mr britt however quickly calmed him and he recovered his customary nerve and coolness after he had been informed by mr boardmau of the nature of the charges against him and of the grounds on which they had been based be laughed cynically and somewhat contemptuously and said if that is the worst they have against me i have nothing to worry about for a dreary hour mrs morse had waited for him in her darkened electric cab while the etruria which was bring ing bim back to face bis accusers was approaching and being moored mrs morse spent an anxious morning using ihe telephone many times before she found out exactly when the etruria was due at the pier she went to the cunard line dock alone mr morse's son by his first wife who stayed at the morse home last night having gone down the bay ou the revenue cutter to meet bis father mrs morse shuns photographers the little cab whirled downtown swiftly in less than half an hour it reached the cunard line dock at the foot of west eleventh street mrs morse opened the door as if to alight then seeing the camera men she drew quickly back and the chauffeur pulled doivn the window curtains when the passengers began to quit the vessel there was a cry of here comes morse and bending nervously forward mrs morse rr.ised oue of the curtains of the cab that she might see bim coining suddenly the throng surged forward to u s.-japanese war would be a crime says takahira new japanese envoy arrivess.t new york with a mes sage of peace cruise america's affair is a naval maneuver on grand scale comment on bat tleship fleet new york feb 16 1t was a message of peace and good will which baron kio goro takahira the new japanese ambassa dor at washington brought to this country on his arrival on the etruria to-day the baron is no stranger to the american peo ple having been consul-gener.il in this city attache at washington and minister there he was also one of japan's envoys in the portsmouth peace conference the ambassador declined to talk at the pier bat promised to receive the reporters at the holland house this evening there he announced that he would not permit any questions to be put to him but would read a prepared statement from which the reporters could take notes i am very much pleased to come back to this great country in my present capacity said the ambassador i started my ca reer as an attache to the legation at wash ington some years ago and i always re garded that city as my cradle lam now going back as the personal representative of my emperor to the president of the unite states and i think i can consider it a triumphant entry into that city it is impossible for a man of ordinary sanity to think of a war between two powers like ours in spite of the sincere friendship actually existing between them it is a crime against hun.anlty against civilization against the well-being of all mankind such a war if ever fought would be the most inhuman event cf the world's history our people at least do not think of the possibility of such an unfortunate event i can easily recall the pleasant experi ences 1 passed through in that most try ing diplomatic life working day and night for almost two years but the sympathy and friendship i received from yon did niuch to diminish the anxiety which other wise would have been immense no one knows better than i how sin cere and true was that friendship or ap preciates more highly its value all that i thought of you then i expressed on leav ing and the very words of my utterances must have been remembered by those who cared to take an interest in me i may simply tell you that i am the same man with the same mind as when i left amer ica for jaoan in december 1005 no breach in friendship i know that some questions have arisen since then about the segregation of japa nese children in the schools on the pacific coast and about japanese emigration i cannot tell you what the exact status of these questions is yet i can tell you thnt in spite of the excitement and speculation reported from time to time by the news papers there has never been any change in the friendship of the two governments which has been historically estabiisbed be tween them and they are both as sincere ns ever in their cordial relations pacific cruise an american affair this is at least what i am giveu to un derstand and i am going hack to wash ington in my confident belief that i will fiud them the same good friends its i left them two years ago last december as to tho voyage of ihe american heet to the pacific coast which has been so much talked of recently i consider it purely an american affair 1 hear there have been all sorts of spec . illations advanced regarding the motives of sucii a voyage but i have always thought i the most reasonable one that we can attrib ' ute it to is that it is a naval maneuver on ! a grand scale love broke weeps and laughs as verdict of guilty is read diagram showing the known and supposed movements of marion grey before and after her conviction yesterday the united states authorities supposed she toas living at is7 dearborn avenue but it was discovered later that she had moved to an apartment house across the street last spring she left there early in the morning it was said to go to elgin after the verdict she was at the federal building when the jury came in went from there to her lawyer's office in the woman's temple and took a cab there to go to benton harbor mich she said even her attorneys say that they do not know where she is photograph of marion qrey taken yesterday and sketch showing her ioeepin in her father's arms in court when the verdict of guilty was read surgeons discover cure for hunchback new york feb 10.-one of the most important experiments of recent years in medical research that of effecting a cure for kyphosis hunchback has resulted so successfully that it was announced to-day at the hospital of the xew york society for the itelief of the crippled and rup tured thai all hunchbacks can grow up straight and strong if they avail them selves of the treatment iu the early stages of the disease more wonderful still is the fact that crooked hacks can be straightened and among the dozen or more cases uow under treatment there is not one which hag not shown a decided recession of the deform ity and it is expected that cures will be made iu every case the treatmeut of the disease result ing from tuberculosis of the bone is a simple onc the onlv appliance used is a plaster of parls cast in which the patient is encased and iu which open ings are cut to penult the application of pressure pads over the hump it is the manner of appl.iug the cast iu which ihe uew features of the treatment are introduced the patient is suspended by his head from the ceiling uy a sliu which passes under his chin while iu tills positiou with the muscles and joints relaxed lhe physicians apply the plaster cream the new method of treatment was dis covered by dr galot of lieivk sui her a famous trench surgeon whose experi ments iu the direction of discovering a cure for.rpinal deformities have giveu niin a world-wide reputation the new met hod was introduced into this country by dr v p gibney surgeon in chief of the hospital for the relief of the ruptured and crippled car kills unknown girl in rich attire an unidetuifled woman richly dressed was struck by a Chicago 4 northwestern passenger train at elizabeth and kinzie streets last night suffering injuries that caused her death a few miuutes after she bad been taken to the county hospital the train empty was being backed iute the weils street station it is believed the woman became confused and was un able to get out of the way of the train she was knocked down by the first coach dragged along on the rails and then thrust to one side the woman was about twenty-three years old she was about five feet nine inches in height and had dark brown hair worn pempudour she wore a dark skirt of cost ly material a white waist a black three quarters length coat and a black hat with red plumes a baud wedding ring and also a ring set with a red stone were on her lingers the accident which occurred it 7 o'clock was witnessed by a <;. lloeft 7*4 milwau kee avenue and he notified the police aft erward be picked up the woman's hat which had been torn from her head and took it to the Chicago avenue police sta i lion hoeft toid the police lie saw liie vuman walking across the tracks anu : , moment before she v.as knocked down be said she appeared to be confused running b sward and forward between the rails j hear iter scream a moment later and ra . to he assistance when he saw ber belnÂ«-i.':'a'bgeii by the coach ('. a anderson mite m gineer did nol sec the woman imk t the tntiu proceeded un iis wnv t.<^b m i a convicted marion grey is missing affinity agent disappears - within five hours after re "" j turn of verdict ... had given new 1,000 baiii conflicting stories told prior to disappearance of her plans expects light sentence says she used telepathy on jury but could not win them all marion grey the elgin affinity broker also known as miss good enough mrs piper and mrs washburn disappeared from Chicago yes terday within five hours after a jury in judge landis court had convicted her of using the united states mails to defraud the assistant united states district at torneys who prosecuted her and who to the amazement of those who followed the trial accepted a renewa of her band in t-e nominal sum of sl.ty > e nt idea where she is they said she was livi i 181 l>sar born avenue inquiry tht.c raroughi irth the informartlen that marion grey har < nt beettra the house since las spring ! she lives across the street t thir .." * j said the proprietress pointing ro a gray | stone apartment on the es side of dearborn avenue just north of superior street when that doorbell w&j luh & man re sponded marion grey was here he said but she went home this morning " home where is that elgin iii is she coming back not that i know of she didn't tell ue anything about her plans she just went seen with father at 4:30 then it was discovered that the matri monial agent had gone from the courtroom to the oflice of her attorneys in the woman's temple building she was seen coming ont of there about 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon ln company with her father j d e goodenough one of her lawyers j j brinton and james mcdonald â€¢ wealthy michigan lumber man wbo cams it chi j cago to become her bondsman the baouj however was so unexpectedly small thav the defendant herself put up ths roones to her ff 1.000 is a trifling amount for shw testified on the stand that her income front the affinity bureaa was often as muck mmi 1,000 in one week the girl chatted a few moments with reporter for the examiner and then lamped ' into a carriage announcing that she was going to benton harbor mich here was a new complication she had toid the people where she had been itvinjc that she was going to elgin she tells at ' reporter she is going to benton harbor she doesn't consider it worth while to tell the federal court or the united states au thorities where she is going â€” but she im gone she may be in benton harbor or she may be on the way to new orleans certainly she is not ln elgin a thorough search was made for her there last evening and no ontr had heard of her return * government quite calm assistant united states district attorney parkin appeared to think that the govern ment was adequately protected by the 1,000 the defendant had left behind indeed i don't know where she is i said and i am not troubling myself sne has two weeks before the date set for arguing the motion for a new trial and in those two weeks she can go where she likes so far as we are concerned she is out ou bail this is uo capital offense the girl ls tired out let her take a rest she needs it the girl defendant before she disap peared says she read the jurors minds i have studied mental telepathy she said and i know that it is something more than a theory i read the thoughts of every one of those twelve jurors while the trial was going on i would sit there looking down into their very souls i know the ones that were thinking she is guilty and she deserves to be pun ished and i knew the ones that were thinking pshaw there's nothing in tbls case two men i know positively had decided to vote not guilty their minds told me ao four others believed me innocent that too came to me on thought waves four had made up their miuds to send me to jail if they could two other mes sages from the remaining jurors did not register themselves distinctly on my brain and i concluded that they were in doubt how to vote it tiaaw the jury near v twenty-four hours itoreaÃŸ^yerd'ci of guilty tiie case was j bfcfc hinds al 11:15 saturday continued on 4th page 2d column contlnued on 2d page 2d column jh weather forecast w i(h Chicago and vicinity fair m wsf and comparatively cool monday y 4 tuesday increasing cloudiness and j vÂ»a slightly warmer fresh northwest idm rf winds becoming variable sfmj speaks words of praise mr gould thanks examiner employment exchange what the examiner employment exchange does for osiers it can do for you call to day 70 washington street Chicago ill feb 14 j9os examiner kniploj meni exchange 70 washington street Chicago 111 gentlemen it is ray duly to write sou jn fact it has been for some time i want to thank you for the position you have secured for me and also for the services you have rendered - came to this elty i wont to your office and got position er but left that oosition later to go west i ha been in near all ie large cities of the united states but never hale t seen ilu iat equals the examiner kmplovment exchange vour good work w:ll continue and with best of luck 1 re rutln truly yours . howard w gould 49 rush 8 tree i j you lose money m erery day hy not letting your wants jsowf i *!!*Â» be known through a small ad in the u7]t f ) j3 want ad pages of the chieago exam gj ~& sj laer it has the largest circulation y~'j vi of any morning newspaper west of flj kjl circulation counts flf

Chicago examiner monday february 17 1908 12 pages vol vi no 49 a m price one cent euvered hy carrier 30 centi per month anti-cannon forces join to compel primary feuds to be settled by state committee at springfield to-morrow Taft club demands vote deneen also expected to favor selection of national dele gates by people would sidetrack yates governor has chance to force most formidable opponent into speaker's camp m complete upheaval of re 7 publican policies and pacts in ** â€¢* Illinois is expected at the meeting of lhe republican state cen tral committee to be held in spring field to-morrow r m sullivan will present to the committee a resolution urging uiat it recommend a popular primary throughout the state for the hoice of delegates to the republican national convention the resolution will be backed by a committee of six selected by the wil liam h Taft club at a meeting in Chicago yesterday afternoon and con sisting of fred w upham a b mc coid frank t fowler j e mcmur ray george e roberts and e a ja-^.lscy reported favorable from springfield conies ihe word : hat governor deneen will not oppose ' and that he is passively favoring the selection of delegates at the prim ' aries which of course means that he is willing to forswear ' allegiance to the favorite son crusade apparently that porch climbers conven tion at litchfield last thursday has been seised upon by the governor as a fitting opportunity and an adequate excuse for bim to break with uncle joe cannon and bitch bis wagon to the rising star of the secretary of war in this he bas a two-fold object first he appreciates the growing strength of the ohio candidate who is also president roosevelt's candidate second he hopes o force his only formidable rival for the republican nomination for governor into odious company would send yates to cannon richard yates is a very effective cam paigner in the rural districts as a pyro technlcal orator he is greatly superior to governor deneen and he bas many friends in Illinois something bas to lie done witb mr yates before the sledding can be made xmooth for deneen's renominatlon the present governor thiuks he sees his ' â€¢ hance in forcing yates to line up with the cannon crowd and shoulder a portion of tbo responsibility for cannon's attitude toward the direct primary bill especially that portion of it which provided that there should be a popular vote on presidential candidates until this time governor deneen bas re frained from interfering witb uncle joe in bis fight for vest pocket delegations which be may deliver at the convention for bimself preferably and if not for himself for any other anti-roosevelt can didate who stands a show f winning the nomination governor feels his way me first but anything to help the reac tionaries is the cannon motto and so great has been the power of the federal machine in Illinois that governor deneen has heretofore been careful to avoid any thing that would indicate his disapproval of a carte blanche for cannon but for a long time back he bas been conducting a quiet canvass on his own ac count feeling the pulse and taking the po litical temperature of the people iu fifty seven counties he found the cannon senti ment very low and iu cook county he dis covered that the opposition to vest pocket delegates especially if they were to be put into uncle joe's waistcoat amounted almost to a popular protest in so far as his investigation has goue he estimates that ten men are for Taft where one favors caunon and he believes also that the odds against the favorite son in his own state are increasing rather than diminishing under such onslaughts as the porch-climbers convention in bis opinion he would be a btronger â€¢ andldale before the people as a tail to the Taft kite than as a trailer to the can non boom which echoes less and less sonorously as the date for the convention draws near â– credited to judge humphrey having arrived at t lis occlusion it only remained for him o hit upon a suit ble occasion for an open ruptnre witb the januon machine the meeting at litch 3 kinds of sunday weather all at one time in Chicago snow on south side clear and windy downtown sunny and pleasant in other parts professor henry cox who gets govern ment money for watching the weather will send in his report in sections to-day if he says that Chicago weather was thus and so or this way or as follows he can not cover the ground this is because chi cago is a large city and sometimes has vari ous kinds of weather all at once within its bounds while snow was falling yesterday after noon on the midway where the big cbi cago university is the air was clear and dry downtown and the wind was biting on the west side and north side it was sunny and pleasant and the wind was gentle the temperature fell to 20 degrees in the loop at 8 o'clock in the evening forecaster cox bad said the day would be cear and fine that was made good in some parts of the town whereas in woodlawn it was not clear and near the lake it was not fine hereafter be mf*y feel impelled to hand out such prognostications as this for hyde park snow and colder for goose island fair and warmer for cragin raiu the forecast to-day â€” for ali Chicago â€” ls just like yesterday jiggs donahue hurled from auto in 2 a m crash machine wrecked in collision with another on south side jiggs donahue first baseman for the white sox was severely hurt in an auto mobile collision this morning at thirty-fifth street and indiana avenue donahue wbo had recently purchased a big touring car was driving t lie machine north in indiana avenue at 2 a m when a car belonging ro tom cbantales the king of the greeks which was being driven west in thirty fifth street at a terrific pace struck donahue's car abeam donahue was thrown out of his auto and the left side of his face was badly burl both machines were wrecked . . . 2 signal sent maine to doom says sigsbee admiral telia how general lee gave word to come to havana washington feb 36 rear admiral sigsbee to-day in atr address told how the words two dollars sent lhe maine to havana and destruction ov.r government hesitated to send war ships to havana because it might precipi tate hostilities he said the maine was waiting at key west harbor for weeks i was in constant com munication with consul general lee in cuba our government did not wish to send one unless there was urgent need we arranged so that when general lee sent a message with the words two dol lars in it i should hasten to havana har bor during the latter part of january i read two dollars in a message and im mediately the maine sailed to her fate car overturns funeral carriage five injured mourners cut and bruised are re leased by spectators five mt-n hi ecupied a carriage in a funeral procession were injured yesterday when a twenty-sixth street car struck and overturned the vehicle nt cottage grove avenue the injured were a blllz sol north t.ilman avenue 15 k gross fi."in north irving avenue 3 if goldman 180 thome avenue m n bloom 4347 st law rence avenue and william will the driver 600 ashland avenue all were cut and bruised thougb not seriously the car struck the vehicle squarely completely overturning it the occupants were re leased from the carriage by the car crew and spectators the vehicle was badly damaged abolish u s senate urges prof zeublin rochester h t feb 16 1 hope the time will come said professor charles zeubliu of the university of Chicago in an address before the labor lyceum to-day when we will not try to reform the senate by electing our senators directly but abol ish it entirely the senate of the united states is the vermiform appendix of our government an operation for its removal is necessary to the political health of our country we still abide by our eighteenth century modes of thinking on political mat ters nine-tenths of our political doctrines were created in the eighteenth century morse is arrested at pier as wife greets him indicted financier declares he went to england hoping*,to sell property freed on 20,000 bail denies he traveled under as sumed name says he did not expect prosecution â– â– n a statement issued a few hows after his arrival from england c w morse the indicted financier made the following ex planation of his trip i thought i might be able to sell tn england property in which i had a larg-e interest and thus in crease my ability to meet the claims of my creditors and i greatly needed a fortnlg-bt's rest i did not sail on the campania under an assumed name nor make any effort to conceal my identity until i read the english papers i did not know my name had not been entered properly on the ship's register i assert my innocence of any criminal act new york feb 16.â€”when charles w morse the indicted financier returned to day from a two weeks trip abroad he was arrested at the pier on the charge of steal ing 200,000 a few hours after bis arrival he was re leased on 20,000 bail when morse returned from his annual va cation trip lo europe a few months ago be was the ice king and the owner of a chain of banks iu this city and he was greeted at the pier by a dozen smiling friends men of promineuce in the world of business to-day aside from the big formidable detectives and a band of reporters the only persons who deemed it worth while to uifiÃŸt trim were his son benjamin a stu dent at yale bis wife and his two law yers albert b boardmau and philip j britt although morse had been informed by wireless of the fact that nn indictment had been found against hiin it was evi dent to i'jose who saw him at the moment police lieutenant berry took him into custody on board the etruria at quaran tine be bad not expected to be arrested like ah ordinary malefactor shudder when arrested the financier shuddered as the lieutenant told him he was a prisoner the color left his face a look of fright shot into his eyes and for an instant he could utter no word a reassuring remark from mr britt however quickly calmed him and he recovered his customary nerve and coolness after he had been informed by mr boardmau of the nature of the charges against him and of the grounds on which they had been based be laughed cynically and somewhat contemptuously and said if that is the worst they have against me i have nothing to worry about for a dreary hour mrs morse had waited for him in her darkened electric cab while the etruria which was bring ing bim back to face bis accusers was approaching and being moored mrs morse spent an anxious morning using ihe telephone many times before she found out exactly when the etruria was due at the pier she went to the cunard line dock alone mr morse's son by his first wife who stayed at the morse home last night having gone down the bay ou the revenue cutter to meet bis father mrs morse shuns photographers the little cab whirled downtown swiftly in less than half an hour it reached the cunard line dock at the foot of west eleventh street mrs morse opened the door as if to alight then seeing the camera men she drew quickly back and the chauffeur pulled doivn the window curtains when the passengers began to quit the vessel there was a cry of here comes morse and bending nervously forward mrs morse rr.ised oue of the curtains of the cab that she might see bim coining suddenly the throng surged forward to u s.-japanese war would be a crime says takahira new japanese envoy arrivess.t new york with a mes sage of peace cruise america's affair is a naval maneuver on grand scale comment on bat tleship fleet new york feb 16 1t was a message of peace and good will which baron kio goro takahira the new japanese ambassa dor at washington brought to this country on his arrival on the etruria to-day the baron is no stranger to the american peo ple having been consul-gener.il in this city attache at washington and minister there he was also one of japan's envoys in the portsmouth peace conference the ambassador declined to talk at the pier bat promised to receive the reporters at the holland house this evening there he announced that he would not permit any questions to be put to him but would read a prepared statement from which the reporters could take notes i am very much pleased to come back to this great country in my present capacity said the ambassador i started my ca reer as an attache to the legation at wash ington some years ago and i always re garded that city as my cradle lam now going back as the personal representative of my emperor to the president of the unite states and i think i can consider it a triumphant entry into that city it is impossible for a man of ordinary sanity to think of a war between two powers like ours in spite of the sincere friendship actually existing between them it is a crime against hun.anlty against civilization against the well-being of all mankind such a war if ever fought would be the most inhuman event cf the world's history our people at least do not think of the possibility of such an unfortunate event i can easily recall the pleasant experi ences 1 passed through in that most try ing diplomatic life working day and night for almost two years but the sympathy and friendship i received from yon did niuch to diminish the anxiety which other wise would have been immense no one knows better than i how sin cere and true was that friendship or ap preciates more highly its value all that i thought of you then i expressed on leav ing and the very words of my utterances must have been remembered by those who cared to take an interest in me i may simply tell you that i am the same man with the same mind as when i left amer ica for jaoan in december 1005 no breach in friendship i know that some questions have arisen since then about the segregation of japa nese children in the schools on the pacific coast and about japanese emigration i cannot tell you what the exact status of these questions is yet i can tell you thnt in spite of the excitement and speculation reported from time to time by the news papers there has never been any change in the friendship of the two governments which has been historically estabiisbed be tween them and they are both as sincere ns ever in their cordial relations pacific cruise an american affair this is at least what i am giveu to un derstand and i am going hack to wash ington in my confident belief that i will fiud them the same good friends its i left them two years ago last december as to tho voyage of ihe american heet to the pacific coast which has been so much talked of recently i consider it purely an american affair 1 hear there have been all sorts of spec . illations advanced regarding the motives of sucii a voyage but i have always thought i the most reasonable one that we can attrib ' ute it to is that it is a naval maneuver on ! a grand scale love broke weeps and laughs as verdict of guilty is read diagram showing the known and supposed movements of marion grey before and after her conviction yesterday the united states authorities supposed she toas living at is7 dearborn avenue but it was discovered later that she had moved to an apartment house across the street last spring she left there early in the morning it was said to go to elgin after the verdict she was at the federal building when the jury came in went from there to her lawyer's office in the woman's temple and took a cab there to go to benton harbor mich she said even her attorneys say that they do not know where she is photograph of marion qrey taken yesterday and sketch showing her ioeepin in her father's arms in court when the verdict of guilty was read surgeons discover cure for hunchback new york feb 10.-one of the most important experiments of recent years in medical research that of effecting a cure for kyphosis hunchback has resulted so successfully that it was announced to-day at the hospital of the xew york society for the itelief of the crippled and rup tured thai all hunchbacks can grow up straight and strong if they avail them selves of the treatment iu the early stages of the disease more wonderful still is the fact that crooked hacks can be straightened and among the dozen or more cases uow under treatment there is not one which hag not shown a decided recession of the deform ity and it is expected that cures will be made iu every case the treatmeut of the disease result ing from tuberculosis of the bone is a simple onc the onlv appliance used is a plaster of parls cast in which the patient is encased and iu which open ings are cut to penult the application of pressure pads over the hump it is the manner of appl.iug the cast iu which ihe uew features of the treatment are introduced the patient is suspended by his head from the ceiling uy a sliu which passes under his chin while iu tills positiou with the muscles and joints relaxed lhe physicians apply the plaster cream the new method of treatment was dis covered by dr galot of lieivk sui her a famous trench surgeon whose experi ments iu the direction of discovering a cure for.rpinal deformities have giveu niin a world-wide reputation the new met hod was introduced into this country by dr v p gibney surgeon in chief of the hospital for the relief of the ruptured and crippled car kills unknown girl in rich attire an unidetuifled woman richly dressed was struck by a Chicago 4 northwestern passenger train at elizabeth and kinzie streets last night suffering injuries that caused her death a few miuutes after she bad been taken to the county hospital the train empty was being backed iute the weils street station it is believed the woman became confused and was un able to get out of the way of the train she was knocked down by the first coach dragged along on the rails and then thrust to one side the woman was about twenty-three years old she was about five feet nine inches in height and had dark brown hair worn pempudour she wore a dark skirt of cost ly material a white waist a black three quarters length coat and a black hat with red plumes a baud wedding ring and also a ring set with a red stone were on her lingers the accident which occurred it 7 o'clock was witnessed by a e nt idea where she is they said she was livi i 181 l>sar born avenue inquiry tht.c raroughi irth the informartlen that marion grey har < nt beettra the house since las spring ! she lives across the street t thir .." * j said the proprietress pointing ro a gray | stone apartment on the es side of dearborn avenue just north of superior street when that doorbell w&j luh & man re sponded marion grey was here he said but she went home this morning " home where is that elgin iii is she coming back not that i know of she didn't tell ue anything about her plans she just went seen with father at 4:30 then it was discovered that the matri monial agent had gone from the courtroom to the oflice of her attorneys in the woman's temple building she was seen coming ont of there about 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon ln company with her father j d e goodenough one of her lawyers j j brinton and james mcdonald â€¢ wealthy michigan lumber man wbo cams it chi j cago to become her bondsman the baouj however was so unexpectedly small thav the defendant herself put up ths roones to her ff 1.000 is a trifling amount for shw testified on the stand that her income front the affinity bureaa was often as muck mmi 1,000 in one week the girl chatted a few moments with reporter for the examiner and then lamped ' into a carriage announcing that she was going to benton harbor mich here was a new complication she had toid the people where she had been itvinjc that she was going to elgin she tells at ' reporter she is going to benton harbor she doesn't consider it worth while to tell the federal court or the united states au thorities where she is going â€” but she im gone she may be in benton harbor or she may be on the way to new orleans certainly she is not ln elgin a thorough search was made for her there last evening and no ontr had heard of her return * government quite calm assistant united states district attorney parkin appeared to think that the govern ment was adequately protected by the 1,000 the defendant had left behind indeed i don't know where she is i said and i am not troubling myself sne has two weeks before the date set for arguing the motion for a new trial and in those two weeks she can go where she likes so far as we are concerned she is out ou bail this is uo capital offense the girl ls tired out let her take a rest she needs it the girl defendant before she disap peared says she read the jurors minds i have studied mental telepathy she said and i know that it is something more than a theory i read the thoughts of every one of those twelve jurors while the trial was going on i would sit there looking down into their very souls i know the ones that were thinking she is guilty and she deserves to be pun ished and i knew the ones that were thinking pshaw there's nothing in tbls case two men i know positively had decided to vote not guilty their minds told me ao four others believed me innocent that too came to me on thought waves four had made up their miuds to send me to jail if they could two other mes sages from the remaining jurors did not register themselves distinctly on my brain and i concluded that they were in doubt how to vote it tiaaw the jury near v twenty-four hours itoreaÃŸ^yerd'ci of guilty tiie case was j bfcfc hinds al 11:15 saturday continued on 4th page 2d column contlnued on 2d page 2d column jh weather forecast w i(h Chicago and vicinity fair m wsf and comparatively cool monday y 4 tuesday increasing cloudiness and j vÂ»a slightly warmer fresh northwest idm rf winds becoming variable sfmj speaks words of praise mr gould thanks examiner employment exchange what the examiner employment exchange does for osiers it can do for you call to day 70 washington street Chicago ill feb 14 j9os examiner kniploj meni exchange 70 washington street Chicago 111 gentlemen it is ray duly to write sou jn fact it has been for some time i want to thank you for the position you have secured for me and also for the services you have rendered - came to this elty i wont to your office and got position er but left that oosition later to go west i ha been in near all ie large cities of the united states but never hale t seen ilu iat equals the examiner kmplovment exchange vour good work w:ll continue and with best of luck 1 re rutln truly yours . howard w gould 49 rush 8 tree i j you lose money m erery day hy not letting your wants jsowf i *!!*Â» be known through a small ad in the u7]t f ) j3 want ad pages of the chieago exam gj ~& sj laer it has the largest circulation y~'j vi of any morning newspaper west of flj kjl circulation counts flf